Theoretical study of the reaction of water with the 1, 3 dipoles fulminic

Theoretical study of the reaction of water with the 1,3 dipoles fulminic acid and acetonitrile oxide. Concerted reactions with a proton slide at the t...
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Leroy, Hegarty, et al. (19) (20) (21) (22) (23) (24) (25)

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Reaction of Water with Fulminic Acid and Acetonitrile Oxide

J. Dyke, N. Jonathan,E. Lee, and A. Morris, J. Chem. SOC.,Farahy Tf6m. 2, 72, 1385 (1976). W. F. Egelhoff, D. L. Perry, and J. W. Linnett, J. Electron Spectrosc. Relat. Phenom., 5, 339 (1974). A. Schweig, N. Thon, and H. Vermeer, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 101, 80 (1979). F. Carnovale,T. H. Gan, and J. 6.Peel, J. Electron Spectrosc. Relat. Phenom., 16, 87 (1979). J. B. Peel and G. D. Willett, J. Chem. SOC.,Faraday Trans. 2, 71, 1799 (1975). F. Carnovale, E. Nagy-Felsobuki, J. 6.Peel, and G. D. Willett, J. Electron Spectrosc. Relat. Phenom., 14, 163 (1978). E. Nagy-Felsobuki and J. B. Peel, J. Electron Spectrosc. Relat. Phenom.,

15, 61 (1979). (26) M. K. Livett, E. Nagy-Felsobuki, J. 6.Peel, and G. D. Willett, lnorg. Chem., 17, 1608 (1978). (27) E. Nagy-Felsobuki and J. 6.Peel, J. Chem. Soc., Fafarjay Trans. 2, 74,1927 (1978). (28) D. Colbowne, D. C. Frost, C. A. McDoweli, and N. P. C. Westwwd, J. Chem. Phys., 68, 3574 (1978). (29) D. Colboume, D. C. Frost, C. A. McDoweli,and N. P. C. Westwood,J. Chem. Phys., 69, 1078 (1978). (30) A. Hinchliffe,Adv. Mol. Relaxation Interact. Processes, 13, 309 (1978). (31) C. A. Coulson and G. N. Robertson, Proc. R.Soc.London, Ser. A, 337, 167 (1974); 342, 289 (1975). (32) F. Carnovale, T. H. Gan, and J. 6.Peel, Aust. J. Chem., 32, 719 (1979).

Theoretical Study of the Reaction of Water with the 1,3 Dipoles Fulminic Acid and Acetonitrile Oxide. Concerted Reactions with a Proton Slide at the Transition State’ M.-T. Nguyen,2aM. Sana,2a G . Leroy,*2aK. J. Dignam,zb and A. F. Hegarty*2b Contribution from the Departments of Chemistry, Universite Catholique de Louvain, I348 Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium, and University College, Cork, Ireland. Received February 20, I979

-

Abstract: The ease of deformation of fulminic acid (HCNO) and acetonitrile oxide (CH3CNO), the formation of hydrogenbonded complexes with water, and the reaction pathway with water as nucleophile (RCNO H20 RC(OH)=NOH) have

+

been studied using the ab initio method. The calculations were carried out using Roothaan’s LCAO-SCF-MO and the supermolecule technique, using Pople’s STO-3G basis set. The reaction pathways were studied by allowing six angles and five bond distances to vary, using the distance R between the carbon of the 1,3 dipole and the oxygen of the water molecule as reaction coordinate. Fulminic acid is most easily bent in the E (or trans) direction and this is the configuration induced in the transition state as the water molecule approaches (thus determining the stereospecific nature of the reaction, as observed experimentally). As the transition state is reached ( R = 1.85 A) there is no energy barrier for the transfer of a proton from the oxygen of the attacking water molecule to that of the fulminic acid. The stereospecificity of the reaction thus ensures that the two oxygens are correctly oriented to facilitate this “proton slide”. There are no intermediates on the reaction pathway which can thus be described as a concerted but asynchronous (47r 2s) reaction. Acetonitrile oxide is less reactive (activation energy of 29.2 relative to 23.5 kcal mol-’ for fulminic acid) and the transition state is reached later with both more proton transfer and deformation of the 1,3 dipole. With HCNO two H-bonded complexes can be formed with water (which do not lie on the reaction pathway); the relative stabilities and the isomerization between the conformations of product hydroxyformaldoxime are also reported.

+

Nitrile oxides (l), which are propargyl-type 1,3 dipoles, react not only with unsaturated substrates (27r systems) to give five-membered heterocycle^,^ but also with nucleophilic reagents, including both anionic (such as HO-, CH3O-, N3-, etc.) and neutral ( H 2 0 , R O H , R2NH, etc.) example^.^ This latter addition leads to the formation of open-chain oximes as products. The mechanism of the reaction of alkenes with 1,3 dipoles has been the subject of intensive study and there now appears to be agreement that this is generally a concerted reaction in which the bonds to the two termini of the dipolarophile are formed a t or about the same time.3 The reaction of R C N O with nucleophiles occurs by attack at carbon; however, these reactions also appear to be stereospecific in that only one of the . ~ have two possible oxime isomers in invariably f ~ r m e d We previously reported5 that this experimental result is confirmed in a model reaction-that of hydroxide ion (HO-) with fulmink acid (HCNO). In this case it was shown that the 2 form of the product was determined kinetically a t the transition state-the configuration of the product was independent of any interaction between the oxygen of the 1,3 dipole and the incoming nucleophile (which was minimal). In neutral solution (pH C 8), water reacts with benzonitrile oxide (1, R = Ph) and related 1,3 dipole^.^ The reaction is slow 0002-78631801 I502-0573$0 1 .OO/O

R-C=&-6+H20

-

1

HO

OH

( t 1/2> 100 min) and was shown to be pH independent. Substituent effects suggest that water is also acting as a nucleophilic reagent. We have now carried out a theoretical study on this reaction using both fulminic acid (1, R = H) and acetonitrile oxide (1, R = CH3) as substrates. We were particularly interested in this case in the timing of proton-transfer relative to the movement of heavy atoms and in the possibility that both processes could be concerted.

Methods of Calculation The calculations were carried out by the a b initio method of Roothaan.6 In each case we have utilized the STO-3G basis set of P0p1.e~~ with the GAUSSIAN-70 program.7bThis basis set is sufficiently reliable for studying reactions between neutral molecules. Moreover, it is not necessary to include a limited configurational interaction in order to obtain qualitatively significant results, since the number of pairs of electrons is conserved in the course of reaction. We have adopted the 0 I980 American Chemical Society

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Journal of the American Chemical Society

(E = 0)

(

102.2

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16, 1980

E =14.7

Figure 3. Relative energies (kcal mol-') of the different forms of hy-

droxyformaldoxime. I

Figure 1.

acid.

I

\

I

Potential energy hypersurface for the deformation of fulminic

Figure 2. Optimized geometry of the Z , s-cis, s-trans form of hydroxy-

formaldoxime. classical view of the supermolecule. Finally, charge centroids were obtained by the method of localization of Foster-Boys,8a using Boyloc'sgb program.

a picture of H C N O in perfect agreement with this structure. The grand axis of the ellipsoid corresponds to a deformation of fulminic acid toward the E (or trans) form. A deformation of IO' on this axis (comprising \E = 9.4' and \k' = 3.4') only requires 0.80 kcal mol-' while a deformation along the lesser axis (comprising \k = -3.4' and 9'= 9.4') requires 2.85 kcal mol-'. In summary, the E (or trans) deformation with respect to the C=N bond is far more readily achieved. Such observations have been also pointed out by Houk20s21and are important in the reactivity of the fulminic acid.22 Using an analogous procedure we have calculated the energy associated with the angle (.$) of the water molecule. The following equation describes the energy (in kcal mol-') associated with deformation of this angle; the minimum arises when 4 is 99.968'.

Results and Discussion Addition of Water to Fulminic Acid. A. Ability of Reactants to Undergo Deformation. The optimized geometries of the

E ( 5 ) = -46890.725 - 10.0696345

reactants have already been d e ~ c r i b e d W . ~ e have calculated the energy required to produce angular deformations in the fulminic acid molecule (since such geometric changes are induced in the reaction with nucleophiles). The angles \k and \k' a r e defined as follows.

B. Isomers of Hydroxyformaldoxime. Hydroxyformaldoxime can exist in either 2 or E configurations with respect to the C2N3 double bond and in the conformations s-cis and strans with respect to the single bonds OlCz and N 3 0 4 .W e have optimized its geometry while maintaining constant the C H and

OH bond lengths ( R C H= 1.07 A and ROH= 0.99 A). As an

H

\

!.1'C-N

P' 0

W e have obtained energy values for different angles between $40 and -40'. Using a second-order regressiont0the energy potential of the surface, E(*,*'), in kcal mol-', can be expressed in the following quantitative way:

E(\k,\k') = -103754.016

+ 0.072348E2 + 0.000146653

+ 0.005172\k2 - 0.006548WP'

+ 0.013058W2

This equation describes an ellipsoid centered on the origin and with an axis of \k = 19.842' relative to the main axis (Figure 1). The principal values of the second derivative matrix of this equation are 0.028 48 (for the largest) and 0.007 98 (for the second). This potential energy surface shows that the fulminic acid is linear in its equilibrium geometry. Such result has already been obtained by Houk,22even with a 4-31G basis set. The Boys localization, where the CN bond is quasi-triple, gives

example, we have given in Figure 2 the structure obtained for the 2, s-cis, s-trans form. The bond lengths remain constant in each form and the valence angles vary by no more than a few degrees. In Figure 3 we have compared the relative energies of the different structures of hydroxyformaldoxime. The respective stabilities depend on the equilibrium between the repulsive interactions between adjacent hydrogens and hydrogen-oxygen or hydrogen-nitrogen attractions. W e have also studied the s-cis-s-trans isomerization for the hydroxyformaldoxime in the Z configuration. Two mechanisms of isomerization are generally proposed' I for this type of reaction: an out-of-plane rotation of the 0 - H or an inversion in the molecular plane. In Figure 4 are given definitions of the structural parameters considered. Tables 1 and I1 give the total energies calculated for the two reaction pathways for isomerization. W e have obtained an analytical formlo for these hypersurfaces using a development of a Fourier series in two dimensions, including in each direction in space (p and cp' for rotation, 6

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Reaction of Water with Fulminic Acid and Acetonitrile Oxide

"\c=n

"\

C=N

i

H'

Inversion (heres=6'=lOO'l

Rot rlicn Ih e r e r

=

P'

= 0)

Figure 4. Geometric parameters for the isomerization s-cis-s-trans

form. " 1 0

*r-w mwLA m m m

0 91 *

"tf

0 0 0

-YO

r

r

r4 I- m r - m o m o m r- oc m

si:gs

0 0 0

0 0 0

tnq

o m m cor-r-

ttf

- o w

mLAv

m - w

Figure 5. Potential energy diagram for the isomerization s-cis-s-trans of hydroxyformaldoxime by an out-of-plane rotation.

r-ma S?*

0 o c

X

b

100

100

260

61.)

Figure 6. Potential energy diagram for the isomerization s-cis-s-trans of

hydroxyformaldoxime by an in-plane inversion mechanism. and 6' for inversion) five even functions (1 .O, cos a, cos 2a, cos 3a, cos 4 a , with a = cp, cp', 6, or 6') and three uneven functions (sin a, sin 2a, and sin 3a).The development of the series then contains 64 basic functions; the multiple regression coefficients obtained are better than 0.992 and the residual variance is less than 0.8 kcal. In Figures 5 and 6 a r e given two-dimensional illustrations of the potential energy hypersurfaces. The main points are summarized in Figure 7; we have included in the same figure the associated energies. T h e structures I-IV are minima while IX-XI1 and XVI-XIX are minimax and structures XIII-XV are maxima on the potential energy hypersurfaces. In summary, rotations about the single bonds CZ-01,and N3-04 are facile nuclear motions and require activation energies of only a few kcal mol-' (less than 8 kcal mol-!). These results are in line with other reported studies12 on scis-s-trans isomerization. O n the other hand, the inversion barriers are considerably higher (60-80 kcal/mol). Such re-

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January 16, 1980

Table 11. Isomerization s-Cis-+Trans of (Z)-Hydroxyformaldoxime. Mechanism of In-Plane Inversion ( E = -24O.xxx au)

6, deg

I00

100 0.489 00 (111)

120 140 160 180 200 220 240 260

0.48043 0.45227 0.41865 0.399 15" (XVIII) 0.410 22 0.441 65 0.468 51 0.477 67 (11)

I20

140

160

6', deg 180

200

220

240

260

0.477 02 0.470 48 0.439 80 0.405 85 0.388 27 0.401 65 0.434 50 0.464 26 0.468 87

0.437 21 0.429 95 0.400 12 0.364 53 0.348 51 0.362 75 0.395 35 0.428 27 0.434 97

0.386 22 0.378 46 0.347 25 0.312 66 0.297 64 0.312 80 0.347 93 0.379 20 0.388 62

0.358 68" (XVI) 0.350 29 0.318 68 0.284 09 0.269 66 (XV) 0.285 83 0.321 36 0.354 66 0.347 41" (XVII)

0.379 05 0.371 22 0.340 00 0.305 80 0.291 75 0.308 86 0.345 88 0.379 44 0.393 39

0.430 35 0.422 76 0.392 07 0.357 48 0.343 45 0.360 68 0.399 80 0.430 71 0.443 67

0.475 45 0.468 08 0.437 06 0.402 89 0.388 77 0.405 68 0.441 83 0.475 01 0.485 96

0.493 25 (IV) 0.484 63 0.453 64 0.419 33 0.405 98" (XIX) 0.422 47 0.458 46 0.491 09 0.501 59 (I)

" Activated complex.

Figure 8. Potential energy diagram of the fulminic acid molecule and the complexation sites of water.

Figure 7. The s-cis-s-trans isomerization of Z-formaldoxime (AE in kcal mol-').

sults are probably a t least in part an artifact of the STO-3G basis set, which is known to overestimate the activation energy of the inversion process.23 C. Water-Fulminic Acid Complexes. The addition reaction of fulminic acid and water may be preceded by the formation of a molecular complex. T h e electrostatic potential mapI3 (V(M)) for fulminic acid (Figure 8) shows the presence of an electrophilic region ( V > 0) about the hydrogen atom and a nucleophilic region (I/ < 0) a t the oxygen atom. T h e minima of electrostatic potential are placed on the perimeter of the base of a cone whose apex is a t the oxygen atom and whose axis of revolution is the axis H C N O . T h e aperture angle of this cone is 48.2' and the distance between the oxygen and the potential minima is 2.21 A. This circumference then has an electrostatic potential of -63.3 kcal mol-!. The potential energy curve calculated is given in Figure 9. T h e displacement of the water molecule about the fulminic acid molecule leads at all times to stabilization, and the change from one complex to the other results in the rotation of the water molecule during its displacement along the axis of HCNO. The general characteristics of the complexes are given in Table 111. Using the supermolecule technique, we have sought the existence of molecular complexes. Keeping the internal geometry of the isolated reactants unchanged, we have displaced a water molecule about the fulminic acid molecule searching for the relative orientations which were most favorable for the two molecules. In each case, the planar structure is the most stable. Two stable molecular complexes a r e obtained, one resulting from nucleophilic attack by water on the hydrogen atom

Table 111. Characteristics of the Water-Fulminic Acid Comdexes

complex

...

TO H ,

H20. * *HCNO HCNO. * .HzO

1.75 1.90

8,

h H f , kcal/mol

-8.4 -4.5

jL,

D

6.5 3.0

t * H 2 0 , C-

-0.046 0.031

of the fulminic acid and possessing CzL'symmetry, the other resulting from electrophilic attack of water on the oxygen atom of fulminic acid with an angle of attack of 70'. I n Figure 8 we have represented the nuclear structures of the two complexes and superimposed them on the electrostatic potential map of the fulminic acid molecule. As previously noted by others,14 the electrostatic potential map is a valuable tool in searching for complexation sites. For the molecular complexes we have allowed relaxation of fulminic acid and water angles. Such a freedom does not modify the angles more than 2' and improves the energy by au. less than 3 X The results recall the heats of formation and the charge transfer obtained in the hydrogen-bonded complexes H 2 0 * H1OI5 and H2O HF.I6 In sum, the oxygen atom acts as a nucleophilic center and the hydrogen atom as an electrophilic center. The carbon atom, which is also electrophilic ( A E = 1.6 kcal mol-'), does not give rise to a minimum in the potential energy hypersurface. Because of this, the molecular complexes between water and fulminic acid do not appear on the reaction pathway for addition (formation of hydroxyformaldoxime). d. Reaction Pathway for Addition. The reaction pathway for the addition of water to fulminic acid has been calculated as a function of the parameters listed (defined in Figure IO): a , OlC2N3 angle; p, H7C2N3 angle; 7,04N3Cz angle; 8, HbOiCz angle; F , HsOICz angle; v, H 6 0 4 N 3 angle; r, OlH6 bond length; r', H604 distance; r C 3 , C2N3 bond length; T N O , N304

---

--

Leroy, Hegarty, et al.

25

1 Reaction of Water with Fulminic Acid and Acetonitrile

-

Nucltophillc a t t a c k

1

01

I

I

I

n2o

I I r I A.86

E l e c t r o p h i l i c a t t a c k of

H20

I I I

I

577

Oxide

I

1 Ir = 2.98 A

- 2.5 -5.0

-

-7.5

I brb6 ' 2

-1

0.0

180.

135'

I I

II

SO'

SO'

t

H-C-N-0

t

t

c 45'

0'

t

a(*)

Figure 9. Structure and energy of the water-fulminic acid molecular complexes.

Table IV. Structure and Energv Characteristics along the Reaction Pathway for the Reaction between HCNO and H?O ~

R,A

a,deg

Adeg

y,deg

180

180 180

180 180 175 170 165 160

130 155 155 155 155

130 101 101 101 101

155

155

151 147 143 120

154 153 150 103 103 103 106

101 101

m

2.73a 2.50 2.25 2.10 2.05 2.00 1.95 1.90 1.85 1.80 1.70 1.60 1 .40C a

175 170 165 160 155 152 150 147 134 130 125 120

115

112 1IO 1I O

1 IO 1 IO 110

109 109 109 116 121

~ d e g 0,deg

1 I8

117 I15

101 101 78 80 80 82

v,deg

8 50 54 58

61 64 67 69 72 100 100

100 100

~~

~~

ro,N2,A

rN2c3,A

r,A

1.30 1.30 1.30 1.30 1.31 1.31 1.32 1.32 1.33 1.34 1.34 1.36 1.39 1.41

1.16 1.16 1.16 1.16 1.17 1.18 1.19 1.20 1.21 1.22 1.22 1.24 1.27 1.29

0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99 1.58 1.61 1.85 1.93

r',A 5.87 3.85 3.43 3.15 3.01 2.88 2.76 2.64 1.88

0.99 0.99 0.99 0.99

E , av

-240.368084 -240.371452 -240.357193 -240.350634 -240.343113 -240.339032 -240.334 366 -240.329430 -240.324698 -240.320695 -240.385 176 -240.449213 -240.459983 -240.488983

Complex. Transition state. Product.

bond length; R , OlC2 distance. The distance R has been chosen as the reaction coordinate. The calculations show that a t all points on the reaction pathway all of the atoms remain in the same plane. In Table IV we have given the structural characteristics and energetics of the reaction pathway. Using the basis set STO-3G, the activation barrier, relative to the isolated reactants, is 23.5 kcal mol-' and the heat of reaction -82.1 kcal mol-'. In summary, the reaction occurs in two phases. The first is deformation of the fulminic acid in the E (trans) mode as the water approaches the carbon atom; this determines that the product will have the 2 configuration (as experimentally observed in all analogous reaction^).^ Thus the transition state is i. The second is transfer of the hydrogen atom H6 from the oxygen 01 toward the atom 0 4 , thus leading to the hydroxyformaldoxime of structure Z (s-trans OICz,s-cis N304) (ii).

H i

11

Figure 10. Geometric parameters for the addition of water to fulminic acid.

A t the transition state the angles \k and \k' have the values of 33 and 37O, respectively. Such a deformation of the isolated fulminic acid molecule requires 15.5 kcal mol-'. At the same time, the angle HOH ( E ) of the water molecule changes from 100 to 109'; this deformation requires 2.3 kcal mol-'. Thus we can say that these deformations alone account for 17.8 kcal mol-], which represents 76%of the total height of the activation barrier. W e observe that the easier deformation mode of fulminic acid corresponds also to the molecular distortion during the addition of H20 to HCNO. Such result has been also pointed out by Houk2* in the nucleophilic addition to acetylenes. Nevertheless, this is not a general rule; otherwise the approach

1 January

Journal of 'the American Chemical Society / 102:2

578 R

0.95

=

1.20

2.00

A

R

1.50

1.70 r ( h

IO

= 1.95

12

(AI

R

1.5

1.7

1.0

1.20

1.85

A

R

1.501.70

1.0

1.2

16, 1980

=I eoi

1.5

1.7

r(11 r 1i1 Figure 11. Evolution of the potential energy hypersurface along the reaction pathway for the reaction of HCNO with H20. Zero level with respect to reactants (kcal/mol-l): (a) 14.9; (b) -8.2; (c) -13.3; (d) -17.0. r

of diazomethane on ethylene would be in two parallel planes and not as found by some of us.24 Figure 11 shows four sections in the potential energy hypersurface which correspond to the arameters R, r, and r'. It should be noted that a t R = 1.85 a corridor is created in the hypersurface which permits the transfer of the hydrogen from one oxygen to the other. This corridor is a nearly flat valley connecting the point R = 1.85 A, r = 1.OO A, and R' = 2.50 A with the transition state R = 1.85 A, r = 1.OO A, and r' = 1.88 A. T h e Boys localization methodx permits us to follow the electronic reorganization along the reaction pathway. O n Figure 12, we have given the charge centroids calculated a t different points on the pathway. The approach route followed by the water molecule is along the axis of one of its lone pairs. T h e effect of the dipolar deformation leads to the formation of a lone pair on the central nitrogen from the original triple bond C2N3. T h e rest of the electronic rearrangements occur after the transition state. Then the hydrogen Hb is displaced progressively, passing from one lone pair on the oxygen 01to another lone pair on the oxygen 0 4 . In parallel, the formation of the intersystem (T bond OlC2 occurs. The electronic reorganization is summarized as follows:

K

n

(01)

--(7

(N3C2)

n

(04)

(7

(C102) n (N3) (04H.5)

(GHd n (01) Eight electrons in all a r e implicated in this reorganization; these occur in a cyclic way as shown schematically in Figure 13. In Table V are given the changes in the overlap populations ( P A B ) along the reaction pathway. According to the usual m e t h ~ d 'we ~ ~have ' ~ transposed the magnitudes in terms of the energies of the bonds ( E A B ) using the following relationships: Eco = 1279.20Pco3 - 516.12Pco2 339.25Pco (7

+ + 1 2 0 . 9 7 P ~ +o ~2 3 1 . 5 O P ~ o

ENO= 571.771"03 EOH= 4 3 5 . 4 8 P o ~

The validity of these expressions has been discussed previo u ~ l y .Using '~ these values it is possible to estimate the degree of evolution of the bonds in the transition state (TAB)using the following relationship:

These quantities are also included in Table V. It is noted that a t the transition state the C2N3 bond has changed to a n important degree while the OlCz bond is weak and the bond 04H6 is almost nonexistent. If the asynchronization of the reaction is defined as

then it can be calculated as 96.6%. Since there is no intermediate on the reaction pathway, the reaction can thus be defined as being concerted but asynchronous. Finally we have observed that the charge transferred from the water molecule to fulminic acid is 0.15 electrons in the transition state. This charge transfer is clearly weaker than in the case of the addition of hydroxide ion to fulminic acid,5 but it occurs in the same direction (Le., in that expected for a nucleophile addition).

Addition of Water to Acetonitrile Oxide In order to obviate the formation of hydrogen-bonded complexes between the nucleophile and the H7C2 of fulminic acid (noted above with water and also reported5 with hydroxide ion) we have also studied the reaction of water with acetonitrile oxide (methyl fulminate). W e were also interested in determining the effect of a substituent both on the deformability of the nitrile oxide and on the energy barrier for reaction. W e have as previously calculated the form of the hypersurface of the potential energy for deformation of the isolated acetonitrile oxide molecule. The analytical formioa t this hypersurface as a function of the angles of deformation 9 and 9' is as follows (in kcal mol-'): E(*,*')

= -127966.33

+ 0.00603\k2 - 0 . 0 0 7 2 6 9 9 ' + 0.01308\k'2

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/ Reaction of Water with Fulminic Acid and Acetonitrile Oxide

579

Table V. Overlap Populations, Bond Energies, and Degree of Evolution of Bonds at Several Points along the Reaction Pathway for Water-

Fulminic Acid Reaction 01-H6

01-c2

C2-N3

Overlap Populations 0.2539 0.2692 0.0066

reactants transition state product

0.0446 0.2766

0.7463 0.6 199 0.4935

Bond Energies (kcal mol-') 0.0 207.5 14.2 158.4 81.4 114.1

110.6 117.2 2.9

reactants transition state product

0.0000

0.2161 0.2048 0.2223

0.0000

0.0008 0.2477

61.5 57.4 63.7

0.0 0.3

107.9

Degree of Bond Evolution (%) 17.5 52.6

transition state

w

0.3

A Figure 13. Scheme for electronic rearrangement.

1' B

i

P

A

Figure 14. Structural characteristics for the reactants, products, and transition state for the addition of water to acetonitrile oxide. Figure 12. Evolution of the charge centroids along the reaction coordinate for addition of H 2 0 to HCNO. (The point of view is rotated by 30" for convenience.)

This expression is in the form of an ellipsoid, centered a t the origin, whose major axis is inclined a t 22.92' to the axis of 9. The principal values of the second derivative matrix are respectively 0.029 23 for the greater and 0.008 99 for the lesser. The easiest mode of deformation of the acetonitrile oxide molecule is in the E (trans) mode with respect to the CN bond, as previously observed for fulminic acid. W e would note, however, that the methyl group makes the molecular motions slightly more difficult. A deformation of 10' along the large axis (comprising 9 = 9.2' and 9'= 3.9O) requires 0.9 kcal mol-' and an analogous deformation along the small axis (comprising 9 = -3.9' and 9' = 9.2') requires 2.92 kcal mol-', We have also studied the reaction pathway for the addition of water to acetonitrile oxide. In Figure 14 we have gathered the structural characteristics for the reactants, the transition state, and the reaction product. The energy of activation for addition is calculated as 29.2 kcal mol-l and the heat of re-

action as -78.3 kcal mol-'. Thus the addition of water to acetonitrile oxide has an activation energy which is significantly higher than that observed for the addition to fulminic acid. Thus the methyl group has an overall deactivating effect. The deformation of the atoms of the acetonitrile oxide in going to the transition state calculated are 40' for the angle 9 and 47' for the angles 9'(as compared with 33 and 37' for fulminic acid). Such a deformation of an isolated acetonitrile oxide requires 24.9 kcal mol-' (E(40,47) - E(0,O)). The parallel deformation of the water molecule (during which the angle changes from 100 to 109') requires 2.3 kcal mol-'. Most (ca. 93%) of the activation barrier consists of the energy required for the deformation of the isolated reactants as they approach the transition state. The difference between the activation barriers for the addition of water to fulminic acid and to acetonitrile oxide (5.7 kcal mol-') is not due to the effect of the methyl group on the ease of deformation of the isolated reactants; in effect, in order to produce a deformation of Q of 40' and \k' of 47O requires 24.8 kcal mol-' for fulminic acid (as against 24.9 kcal/mol for CH3CNO) and on the other hand 15.6 kcal mol-' (against 15.5) is required to produce a deformation of 33' for 9 and 37' for W.The influence of ease

580

Journal of the American Chemical Society

/

102:2

/ January 16, 1980

Table VI. Overlap Populations, Bond Energies, and Degree of Evolution of Bonds at Several Points along the Reaction Pathway for the Water-Acetonitrile Oxide Reaction 01-H6

reactants transition state product reactants transition state product

C2-N 3

0 1 4 2

N3-04

04-H6

Overlap Populations 0.2539 0.2721 0.0060

0.7454 0.5844 0.4901

0.0000

0.0593 0.2713

Bond Energies (kcal mol-]) 0.0 207.1 18.6 145.5 81.7 113.0

110.6 118.5 2.6

Degree of Bond Evolution (%) 22.7 65.5

transition state

of deformation of the reactants (when both are deformed to the same extent) is thus very small indeed (0.1 kcal mol-’). The deactivating effect of the methyl group therefore probably arises from its electron-donating nature which tends to disfavor nucleophilic attack on the neighboring carbon; the transition state thus occurs later on the reaction coordinate, with a greater degree of deformation of the substrate. This result is in line with experimental observations since the Hammett p values for the attack of nucleophiles on the substituted benzonitrile oxides 2 are always positive (e.g., p

As

0.2115 0.2086 0.2193 59.8 58.7 62.6

0.0000

0.0089 0.2497 0.0

3.9 108.7 3.6

or electronic effects. It should be noted that the favorable internal proton transfer observed here may also occur either intermolecularly or via the intermediacy of other water molecules when the reaction is carried out in solution.

Acknowledgments. The Laboratoire de Chimie Quantique de 1’UniversiteCatholique de Louvain wishes to acknowledge financial assistance from OTAN for an international program of research on theoretical problems in chemical reactions. M.-T.N. thanks the Administration des Relations Culturelles Internationales for a research grant, and K.J.D. is grateful to the Department of Education for a Maintenance Grant for Research. References and Notes

= +0.57 ( H 2 0 as nucleophile), +0.80 (HO-), and +0.75 ( C H ~ C O Z - ) )implying ~ that electron donation reduces the reactivity. In Table VI are noted the overlap populations, the energies, and the degrees of evolution of the bonds along the reaction pathway. The charge transfer measured on the basis of the Mulliken population is 0.16 to the transition state. One important point to note is that the intersystem bond 04H6,which is being formed, is more advanced in this case than for the reaction of fulminic acid. The asynchronization measured on this basis is 73%. The reaction therefore remains concerted but strongly asynchronous, and proton transfer also occurs at or just after the transition state through the corridor (see Figure 1 1 ) with no energy barrier.

Conclusions The present work allows us to describe in some detail the mechanism of addition of water to fulminic acid and to acetonitrile oxide. The reaction is concerted (being overall 47r 2s) but highly asynchronous. The transfer of a proton from attacking water to the oxygen terminus of the 1,3 dipole begins at the transition state. This “proton slide”19 is predicted to occur without an energy barrier. The product of addition is an oxime of the configuration Z s-trans at the OIC2bond and s-cis about the N304 bond. This form of hydroxyformaldoxime is not the most stable; obtained kinetically, it may evolve eventually to other (2 or E, different tautomeric) structures. However, such changes occur well after the transition state and do not affect our conclusions. The calculations also show the deactivating role of the C-methyl group, arising from steric

+

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